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[ad_1] Image source: Getty Images Lloyds (LSE:LLOY) shares are among some of the most popular investments among UK investors. And it’s not entirely hard to understand why. After all, the banking giant serves a mission-critical role within the UK economy that gives it several desirable defensive traits. And pairing that with a tasty-looking 4.2% dividend yield, snapping up some shares could be a terrific way to unlock a reliable and consistent passive income. So let’s say an investor wants to earn £1,000 a month from Lloyds dividends. How many shares do they need to buy? And is it actually a…

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[ad_1] Image source: Getty Images When it comes to investing in property, many Britons favour buy-to-let. This is understandable as this form of property is both easy to understand and tangible. There are plenty of other ways to make money from UK property however. And many investments can even be held inside a Stocks and Shares ISA. An easy way to do it One of the easiest ways to invest in property these days is via real estate investment trusts (REITs). These are companies that own different types of property assets (eg residential buildings, office buildings, hospitals, shopping centres, hotels,…

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[ad_1] Image source: Getty Images Investors are constantly hunting for the best stocks to buy. And this pursuit’s more important than ever during a crash or correction. After all, history’s shown that these volatile periods create some of the best buying opportunities. With UK shares recently reaching a new all-time high despite shaky economic conditions, there’s growing concern that a downturn may soon emerge. While this bearish sentiment’s not entirely without justification, a crash is far from guaranteed. Nevertheless, let’s assume the worst. Which stocks could be terrific investments during a market meltdown? Defensive versus aggressive Identifying the best stocks…

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[ad_1] NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S. job growth slower much more than expected in July, and the data from the prior month was revised sharply lower, indicating the labor market could be showing signs of stalling. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 73,000 jobs in July, after rising by a downwardly revised 14,000 in June, the Labor Department data showed on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 110,000 jobs added last month. The unemployment rate rose to 4.2% in July from 4.1% in the previous month. MARKET REACTION STOCKS: S&P E-minis briefly pared declines and were last down 1.05% BONDS: Treasury yields…

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[ad_1] Image source: Getty Images Even with UK shares reaching record highs in 2025, there are still plenty of cheap stocks for investors to look at. And some of these businesses are hiding in plain sight, with Melrose Industries (LSE:MRO) and Premier Foods (LSE:PFD) standing out from the crowd. A critical aerospace supplier Melrose has undergone an enormous transformation in the last few years, evolving from an acquisitive industrial engineering enterprise into an aerospace pureplay. In 2025, this transition’s in the final stages of completion, with a lot of accounting quirks that make it difficult to figure out what’s actually…

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[ad_1] Image source: Getty Images There’s no question that valuations are starting to look stretched in some parts of the stock market. But I don’t think that should deter investors from looking for shares to buy. It’s hard to make a case for buying Palantir shares at a price-to-sales (P/S) ratio of 120, but not all stocks are the same. The question for investors is where are the opportunities?. Valuations Both the FTSE 100 and the S&P 500 are trading at some of their highest price-to-earnings (P/E) multiples in recent years. And that’s because share prices have gone up faster…

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[ad_1] Image source: Getty Images If I were to invest £1m into a host of dividend-paying stocks like Card Factory, Lloyds, NatWest, Phoenix Group and Legal & General, I could hope to earn around £60,000 annually (£5,000 a month) in passive income. That’s because the dividend yield would likely average around 6%, indicating the size of the potential return annually. Now, the higher the yield, even when it’s an average of several stocks, is likely to be less sustainable than a lower yield. Investment writers often talk about 4% being a more sustainable yield that may also match the value…

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[ad_1] This week we’re joined by Mark Kabbash, founder of The Dandy Horse. He chats with us about a new system for measuring and verifying bike commuting to obtain carbon avoidance credits. We discuss how the system works and the funding it could generate. Scroll past the audio player below for a partial edited transcript of the episode — or click here for a full, AI-generated (and typo-ridden) readout.Jeff Wood: How did you start to think about it as something that could be used in a broader sense?Mark Kabbash: Bicycle infrastructure, bicycle theft — and those are the things that really bothered me. For instance,…

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